Mus.Hs.6035. Copy begun by Tenschert, from the office of Hlawaczek in Vienna, and completed by Carda in autumn 1872, containing revisions by Bruckner and also serving as engraver's copy for the first print edition, revised by Bruckner and Cyril Hynais in 1892 (= Haas D). - Benjamin Gunnar Cohrs, 2009

Double bass may replace cello. Schmalnauer's arrangement is PD-US due to the failure to register the work with the U.S. Copyright Office and failure to file an NIE. Score bears a "scarecrow" copyright notice of 1952.

In the USA this work is most likely in the public domain because it was published without a compliant copyright notice, no renewal was found after a thorough search of the Catalog of Copyright Entries, or it was either ineligible for "restoration" under GATT/TRIPs and/or no record of an NIE filing was found in the online records of the US Copyright Office.

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ca.300dpi color images. Source: Mus.Hs.6018. Bound with the surviving sketch for Bruckner's Symphony, WAB 142. Apparently, this sketch was identified by Ferdinand Löwe as possibly being a first draft of the finale to Symphony No.2.